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Showing posts with the label “Assad regime”

Between the Politics of Life and the Politics of Death: Syria 1963-2024 (Part 5)

 Spectrums of death A spectrum of violence was operating in Syria well before the revolution, but since 2011, it has been reconfigured. It allows the Syrian regime to deploy gradual techniques that create uneven death worlds. The spectrum of violence starts with the fear of being arbitrarily arrested and subjugated to torture. It includes the siege and subsequent politics of starvation. It involves the various ways Syrians are tortured and indiscriminately killed. In many of these cases, torture is not performed to gain information, but rather to actualize state power. The combination of direct and indirect violence that Syrians have experienced since 2011 has led to catastrophic humanitarian conditions.68 The Syrian regime and its allies have created a spectrum of death worlds where bodies are subjected to various forms of violence. The cruelty of a technique does not have a universal impact; its effect varies from one body to another. For example, crossing a checkpoint has an une...

'Leaked documents' Suggest Secret Dealings Between Assad Regime and Israel

“The contents of the reported documents challenge the long-standing narrative that the  Assad government  was a steadfast opponent of Israel, instead portraying its alleged complicity in Israeli military operations against Iranian targets. The documents state that Assad's regime not only received intelligence from Israel but also actively coordinated attacks against Iranian positions.”

Between the Politics of Life and the Politics of Death: Syria 1963-2024 (Part 1)

[The present is a consequence of an ongoing past. In order to understand the coming alliances and conflicts, cooptation and containment, grassroots struggles and top-down repression, the old and new market forces and those who pull the strings regionally and internationally, the cultural scene and the new cultural production, the role and position of women in the ‘new Syria’, the adaption and concessions or intransigence and authoritarianism of this or that political group, one needs to map out Syria what has happened.  Who will ‘the Islamist-led regime’ work with, who will provide the capital and the conditions? What condition state like the US and Turkey set? Will the old institutions – or what was left of them – be transformed or reformed? Those who marched from Idlib to Damascus do not have the experience of running big cities like Aleppo or a big and diverse capital like Damascus. Even if the leaders tolerated the cultural and artistic traditions of the past decades, would the...